Product innovator Cambridge Consultants has created a new digital health platform leveraging AI to improve patient monitoring – and the first iteration focuses on clinical trials and the effect of patient stress on trial outcomes.

These include the diagnosis of neurological conditions, the post market surveillance of drugs, the development of closed loop therapeutics, rehabilitation and remote patient monitoring.

Within the consumer space, Verum can enable consumer brands to gain measured, quantitative insights into the use of products during trials. This could accelerate the product development process and provide new insights to spark innovation.

The Cambridge business claims Verum will reshape the way healthcare is delivered. The platform remotely monitors patients and provides machine learning-driven predictions around conditions or disease states.

Verum’s initial test application focuses on clinical trials, where huge efficiencies can be achieved by identifying and mitigating the effect of patient stress on trial outcomes.

Stress is an underlying cause of behavioural and disease states and yet it is poorly characterised, leading to badly controlled clinical trials with average drop-out rates at 30 per cent.

For proof of concept, Cambridge Consultants designed a system to measure and monitor a participant’s stress levels during trials. Developed in consultation with clinical psychiatrists and neuroscientists, Verum harnesses the power of biometric data, primarily voice and electromyography (EMG), and machine learning to better understand outcomes and increase the likelihood of clinical success.

This machine learning-driven system can provide deeper insight on participants during trials through real-time triggers and alerts, enabling clinicians, nurses and trial co-ordinators to mitigate the effect of stress on compliance, investigate stress as a confounding factor and inform better adaptive trial design through continuous data streams.

With the average cost of a Phase 2 clinical trial ranging from $7 million to $19.6mn and 80 per cent of all clinical trials failing to reach completion it’s clear that increased efficiency has the potential to deliver very significant savings.

Verum comprises sensors integrated into a wearable, a data collection app and a widget for healthcare dashboards that augments existing data with patient-specific predictions and alerts, for unprecedented clinical insight. Verum’s ability to provide rich, contextualised biometric information at both population and patient level has the potential to revolutionise precision medicine, post-market surveillance and drug development.

Verum works by enabling clinicians, nurses and trial co-ordinators to access biometric and behavioural data from continuously monitored patients, gaining valuable context around a specific condition.

This is achieved by applying a machine learning algorithm to measured patient data, producing a single numerical estimator of a patient’s stress levels at any stage of the trial.

Jaquie Finn, head of digital health at Cambridge Consultants, said: “The rising cost of clinical trials, combined with the commercial risks of failure, mean it’s vital we’re able to harness the power of AI and continuous patient monitoring to mitigate the impact of stress on clinical trial outcomes.

“Verum informs better adaptive trial design through bigger, real-time contextualised data sets and will mark a step-change in the efficiency of clinical trials.”